(no subject)
Jul. 8th, 2007 05:06 pm![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
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Date: March 27, 2001
Status: Private - Crowley and Gabriel
Setting: London
Summary: The first leg of the journey, continued from here
Following the angel to the airport was a relatively simple matter. Crowley was well aware of the difficulties inherent in flying in the city but moreso knew that there was only one possible destination no matter how his quarry traveled. Thus he didn't worry when he lost Gabriel's trace on occasion. He'd pick it up again at Heathrow. Using short cuts and certain driving techniques, the demon made it to the airport not five minutes before Gabriel's plane left.
Parking in the loading zone, confident that his car wouldn't be bothered, Crowley hurried inside. The angel's aura was stronger here and he wondered what miracle he'd needed to perform in order to make his flight. As it was strongest at the British Airlines desk, the demon followed. In moments, he'd learned that Mr. Gabriel Engel - how original - was bound for Copenhagen on a flight that had just left. With a vehement curse and a lot of yelling, the cowed lady behind the desk who could coolly deal with even the most drunken and belligerent fliers but not a angry demon, found a seat on a rival Air France flight that was due to leave in half an hour. Crowley produced his passport and strode toward the gate.
***
Over the next several hours, he trailed Gabriel through the streets of Copenhagen, then back to the airport. It had apparently been only a stop to throw off anyone who might be following him. Which wasn't a bad idea in theory, but Crowley wondered just how dumb the angel thought he was. They went next to Munich for a day, and then to Oslo, before ending in Amsterdam, where Crowley's normally thin patience wore out.
Status: Private - Crowley and Gabriel
Setting: London
Summary: The first leg of the journey, continued from here
Following the angel to the airport was a relatively simple matter. Crowley was well aware of the difficulties inherent in flying in the city but moreso knew that there was only one possible destination no matter how his quarry traveled. Thus he didn't worry when he lost Gabriel's trace on occasion. He'd pick it up again at Heathrow. Using short cuts and certain driving techniques, the demon made it to the airport not five minutes before Gabriel's plane left.
Parking in the loading zone, confident that his car wouldn't be bothered, Crowley hurried inside. The angel's aura was stronger here and he wondered what miracle he'd needed to perform in order to make his flight. As it was strongest at the British Airlines desk, the demon followed. In moments, he'd learned that Mr. Gabriel Engel - how original - was bound for Copenhagen on a flight that had just left. With a vehement curse and a lot of yelling, the cowed lady behind the desk who could coolly deal with even the most drunken and belligerent fliers but not a angry demon, found a seat on a rival Air France flight that was due to leave in half an hour. Crowley produced his passport and strode toward the gate.
***
Over the next several hours, he trailed Gabriel through the streets of Copenhagen, then back to the airport. It had apparently been only a stop to throw off anyone who might be following him. Which wasn't a bad idea in theory, but Crowley wondered just how dumb the angel thought he was. They went next to Munich for a day, and then to Oslo, before ending in Amsterdam, where Crowley's normally thin patience wore out.
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Date: 2007-07-20 11:53 pm (UTC)Furious, he stepped forward, grabbed the archangel's shirt collar, and hauled him to his feet. "I haven't followed you for three days jusst to engage in casual civilities," he hissed, no longer actively tired, but dusty and travel worn. "Is he here or not?"
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Date: 2007-07-21 03:59 am (UTC)He did not react to Crowley's violent movement; he hoped that Crowley had no real drive to hurt him and that by showing no resistance, they could bypass the physical side of this fight and get straight to their usual verbal argument, which he was at least more accustomed to. The Messenger was, by nature, not much of a warrior. And on top of everything else, Gabriel did not wish to carry with him the guilt of using his powers against the frustrated demon unless it became truly necessary.
"He's not here," he answered, careful to keep any emotion from his voice. "I don't know where he is."
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Date: 2007-07-22 06:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-07-22 10:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-07-23 07:22 am (UTC)He swiveled on his heel and moved against Gabriel's ear to whisper harshly, "No? You don't think they'll think it's a little suspicious that the second I got the first hint of his location, I followed you instead? If they didn't know about the two of you before, they do now. That or they think I'm unfit for this task, neither of which does you any favours, trumpet boy. And now the plan I made while I was biding my time is shot to shit because you decided to be clever."
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Date: 2007-07-23 08:11 am (UTC)The angel had, in fact, considered discussing the matter with Crowley, but only after his first plane had taken off: It didn't seem the most tactful thing to admit now that, as he'd watched Heathrow recede into a small blotch beneath him, confident that Crowley was somewhere nearby, he'd quickly decided that the demon would only have been argumentative and unpleasant about the issue. So far, he was seeing no evidence to the contrary.
"They don't know you're following me, serpent," he said; and though his own confidence in this statement wavered, there was a hardness to his previously not-quite-amiable tone that spoke otherwise. "They don't know where he's gone, and they don't know what my orders are, so there's nothing to suggest we're not simply each tracking him independently. I very much doubt that three days of you lagging along behind me has given away anything about 'the two of us,' and really, I don't see how this could make you look any more unfit than not leaving Lower Tadfield at all."
He settled more easily into his seat, as though speaking the words aloud had made them somewhat more tangible, boosting his shaky confidence. "But by all means, demon, tell me," he added, his tone more cordial if still somewhat dry, "what was your plan?"
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Date: 2007-07-27 07:38 am (UTC)"They don't know I'm following you? It's more plausible to think that I just happen to keep ending up in all the same places as a sodding archangel with an unnatural interest in an ex-Crown of Hell? Most demons are dumb, but not all of them and not that much. Underestimate the wrong one at the wrong time and you're fucked." He smacked the table with the heel of his hand. "If I'd had any indication that I didn't have to come after you and save your sorry arse again, I'd be halfway across the planet right now and we could have done this right."
The demon sank into a chair, suddenly tired from his emotional outburst. "I've been keeping an eye on the news," he explained, his voice rough. "I spend half my day reading bloody papers from around the world, trying to find patterns of unexplained deaths or disappearances. Probably disappearances. Belial's too canny to leave bodies around. I thought that in that way, I'd either find him and be able to avoid his location, or find enough evidence to logically go somewhere else when something like this happened. But rather than use my months of apparently pointless research and look good for the cameras in doing so, I've been wandering aimlessly around Northern Europe and ended up in this dump. With you."
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Date: 2007-07-27 11:21 pm (UTC)He surveyed the demon across the table, noting that Crowley's face seemed tight, drawn with the same lines of fatigue that the angel suspected might have been etched in his own expression upon arriving in Amsterdam. Perhaps it was the discovery of this similarity that added more understanding to his tone as he continued. "Or is all this just to emphasize that I should have spoken to you first?"
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Date: 2007-07-29 06:28 am (UTC)He sighed. "Look, we both care about him, though in vastly different ways and for vastly different reasons. The least we can bloody well do is talk. I refuse to have him caught and me dragged down with him because you and I couldn't manage a civil conversation. So can the tough act and let's figure out what happens now."
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Date: 2007-07-30 07:27 am (UTC)"So far as I am aware, the only demons who know of any special circumstances between Belial and myself are you and Lucifer. I think it would be plausible for you to say you were after the Crown, but were waylaid in Amsterdam by the archangel Gabriel? No one needs to know you have any idea why I would be seeking him as well." The angel's gaze was sober as he watched the demon across from him, but Gabriel kept any malice from his tone, even when he spoke the Morningstar's name, and tried to sound as though he were inviting the demon's - hopefully less vehement - opinion.
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Date: 2007-08-01 01:34 am (UTC)"We don't know what the Morningstar knows," he said, beginning to fall into habits of explanation and rationalization that he'd made with Aziraphale a millennia prior with the adoption of the Arrangement. "I think if he suspected something between the two of you, he would have mentioned it when he... gave me my new assignment." There, that sounded professional and not at all gory. "Unless, of course, he's testing me." Crowley wasn't being paranoid. He was simply thinking in knots the way he had to in order to survive. "But waylaid is fine. No one would doubt that in a fight with an archangel, I'd get my arse handed to me. That doesn't explain why I followed you for three days first, though."
The demon was silent a moment as he parsed a thought. "What if you lured me out here with the promise of information on Belial, stopping in those other cities to make it look believable? Then, once I was outside of Adam's protection, you made your move. You get to look clever to whomever you report to for whatever reason you want and I look foolish rather than treasonous. I can't look too stupid or I'll lose this job, but being underestimated is always an advantage..." Which was possibly a technique he was using at that very moment. The life of a long-term double agent is a complex one, but in the end his loyalties lay with, well, Crowley.